US spacecraft named after late Indian-American astronaut Kalpana Chawla
Northrop Grumman, an American global aerospace and defence technology company, announced that its next Cygnus capsule are going to be named the “S.S. Kalpana Chawla”, in memory of the mission specialist who died together with her six crewmates aboard the spacecraft Columbia in 2003.
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Chawla began her career at NASA in 1988 as a powered-lift computational fluid dynamics researcher at the Ames research facility in California. Photo credit: NASA/Cesar Acosta.
An American commercial cargo spacecraft bound for the International space platform has been named after fallen NASA astronaut Kalpana Chawla, the primary India-born woman to enter space, for her key contributions to human spaceflight.
Northrop Grumman, an American global aerospace and defence technology company, announced that its next Cygnus capsule are going to be named the “S.S. Kalpana Chawla”, in memory of the mission specialist who died together with her six crewmates aboard the spacecraft Columbia in 2003.
“Today we honour Kalpana Chawla, who made history at @NASA because the first female astronaut of Indian descent. Her contributions to human spaceflight have had an enduring impact,” the corporate tweeted on Wednesday.
“Northrop Grumman is proud to call the NG-14 Cygnus spacecraft after former astronaut Kalpana Chawla. it’s the company’s tradition to call each Cygnus after a private who has played a pivotal role in human spaceflight,” the corporate said on its website.
“Chawla was selected in honour of her prominent place in history because the first woman of Indian descent to travel to space,” it said.
“While Chawla made the last word sacrifice in commission to the space programme, her legacy lives on through her fellow astronauts and people she has inspired to follow in her footsteps,” it said.
“Her final research conducted onboard Columbia helped us understand astronaut health and safety during spaceflight. Northrop Grumman is proud to celebrate the lifetime of Kalpana Chawla and her dream of flying through the air and in space,” it said.
The S S Kalpana Chawla capsule is scheduled to launch on the NG-14 mission atop a Northrop Grumman Antares rocket from the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport (MARS) at NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia on Michaelmas . The spacecraft will reach and be attached to the space platform two days later.
For the NG-14 mission, the Cygnus spacecraft will deliver approximately 3,629 kg of cargo to the space platform .
Chawla was born in Karnal, Haryana on St Patrick’s Day , 1962. She received a Bachelor of Science degree in aeronautical engineering from Punjab Engineering College in India in 1982.
Chawla then moved to the us to pursue her graduate education; in 1984 she received a Master’s degree in aerospace engineering from the University of Texas, and a Ph.D. in aerospace engineering from the University of Colorado in 1988.
She held commercial pilot’s licenses for single- and multi-engine aeroplanes, seaplanes and gliders, and was also a licensed flight instructor.
Chawla began her career at NASA in 1988 as a powered-lift computational fluid dynamics researcher at the Ames research facility in California.
Her work targeting the simulation of complex air flows encountered by aircraft flying in ‘ground-effect.’
In 1993, Chawla joined Overset Methods Inc. as vice chairman and a researcher in aerodynamics.
After becoming a naturalised US citizen in April 1991, Chawla applied for the NASA astronauts corps. She was selected in December 1994 and reported to the Johnson Space Center in Houston in 1995 as an astronaut candidate in Group 15.
In November 1996, Chawla was assigned as a mission specialist on STS-87 aboard the spacecraft Columbia, becoming the primary woman of Indian descent to fly in space.
Chawla’s second spaceflight experience came in 2001 when she was selected for the crew of STS-107. The flight was dedicated to science and research, with approximately 80 experiments completed.
Chawla lost her life during the STS-107 mission when the spacecraft Columbia disintegrated upon reentering the Earth’s atmosphere